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The origin of coarticulation

1999
AbstractThe concept of coarticulation, i.e. the apparent variation of segments due to the influence of adjacent or nearby segments, is central to almost any area in phonetic research. The following text considers the 'origin' of this concept from three different perspectives.
Kühnert, Barbara, Nolan, Francis
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Coarticulation in dysarthria

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2001
The dysarthrias are a group of speech disorders resulting from impairment to nervous system structures important for the motor execution of speech. Numerous studies have examined how dysarthria impacts articulatory movements and the resulting changes in vocal tract shape.
Kris Tjaden   +2 more
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Numerical Model of Coarticulation

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1967
The essential features of the coarticulation properties of Swedish dental stops in vowel-consonant-vowel contexts can be described by the formula s(x; t) = v(x; l)+k (t)[c(x) − v(x; t)]wc(x), where x represents the longitudinal distance between lips and glottis and s(x; t) denotes the shape of the vocal tract at some instant of time, t, during the ...
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Coarticulation in Phonology

2022
There is debate about how coarticulation is represented in speakers' mental grammar, as well as the role that coarticulation plays in explaining synchronic and diachronic sound patterns across languages. This Element takes an individual-differences approach in examining nasal coarticulation in production and perception in order to understand how ...
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The Perception of Coarticulated Emphaticness

Phonetica, 1974
Abstract This study answers the question whether listeners could identify the presence of an emphatic class of consonants (m, ð, s, t, k), even when tape-splicing removed, from the word, the consonant in question. The speech materials consisted of 14 pairs of meaningful Arabic words contrasted in a single consonant; these consonants were
L H, Ali, R G, Daniloff
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Parsing coarticulated speech in perception: effects of coarticulation resistance

Journal of Phonetics, 2005
Abstract A speaker produced schwa-CV disyllables in which consonants were low or high in coarticulation resistance. Articulatory and acoustic measurements verified that the magnitude, but not the extent, of anticipatory coarticulation from the stressed vowel to the schwa was modulated by coarticulation resistance.
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Perception of anticipatory coarticulation effects

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1981
Articulatory and acoustic studies have shown that the effects of anticipatory coarticulation may extend across several segments in an utterance. But previous perceptual studies suggest that only the information carried by immediately adjacent segments is used in perception.
J G, Martin, H T, Bunnell
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Dynamic specification of coarticulated vowels

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 1983
An adequate theory of vowel perception must account for perceptual constancy over variations in the acoustic structure of coarticulated vowels contributed by speakers, speaking rate, and consonantal context. We modified recorded consonant–vowel–consonant syllables electronically to investigate the perceptual efficacy of three types of acoustic ...
W, Strange, J J, Jenkins, T L, Johnson
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Perceptual Effects of Forward Coarticulation

Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1972
Portions of CV syllables following a carrier phrase were sequentially deleted using an electronic gating technique. Listeners were required to identify the consonants and vowels that had been partially or completely deleted. Listeners were able to identify most consonants and all vowels above chance level even though the steady state portions had been ...
D P, Kuehn, K L, Moll
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Coarticulation: the Phenomenon

2006
Coarticulation Theory was developed in the late 1960s and early 1970s explicitly to overcome a serious problem in Classical Phonetics (CP), the descriptive theory dealt with in Chapter 1.
Mark Tatham, Katherine Morton
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